Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Planning a trip to New York in business class? Save a fortune in Avios and cash by flying Iberia

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There was a lot of discussion on Head for Points last week about Virgin Atlantic’s decision to raise taxes and charges on its Upper Class flights to the US to a crazy £1,196. The airline quickly backtracked and the fees are now back to ‘only’ £996 return.

For those who hate paying large fees but want to travel in comfort, it is worth reminding you how to save a huge sum in Avios and cash when heading to New York in Business Class, by flying Iberia.

Remember that you can now use a British Airways American Express 2-4-1 companion voucher on Iberia. This means that you can fly Business Class to New York for just 34,000 Avios per person, return.

Planning an Avios trip to New York? Save a fortune with Iberia

How to redeem Avios via Iberia Plus

This article is a long one, so let’s quickly summarise what you need to know:

  • when travelling to the US East Coast, the number of Avios you need is substantially lower with Iberia – from just 68,000 Avios return in Business Class
  • if that wasn’t good enough news, taxes and charges are lower and availability is better than if you book on British Airways
  • following relatively recent changes, you can now get this pricing when booking at ba.com – there is no need to move your Avios into an Iberia Plus account and book via the Iberia website
  • Iberia has its own peak and off-peak calendar which can work in your favour, as UK school holidays are often off-peak
Planning an Avios trip to New York? Save a fortune with Iberia

Why should you redeem Avios on Iberia long haul?

When an Avios collector in the UK looks for a long-haul redemption, British Airways is the obvious choice of airline. However, the Avios and/or taxes and charges can often be very high.

To New York, for example, an off-peak Business Class flight from Heathrow is 160,000 Avios + £350 in fees. This is a LOT of Avios, even with a 2-4-1 voucher. You can choose to use fewer Avios, but the cash component shoots up quickly.

Avios and/or taxes on Iberia flights are often a fraction of those charged by British Airways – although Air Passenger Duty will be added if your connecting flight from the UK is on the same ticket.

Business Class seating on Iberia is now excellent

Iberia has been through a substantial restructuring since being bought by IAG, the parent company of British Airways.  It has gone from being a joke, if we’re honest, to one of the more impressive European carriers.

Rhys recently tried out the new A350 Business Class seat on a trip to Bogota – click here and see below. It’s a very good product, although only on a few aircraft so far. That said, the older A350 seat isn’t bad either.

Iberia has no First Class.

Planning an Avios trip to New York? Save a fortune with Iberia

If you want to try Iberia Business Class but are short of Avios or time, it runs a few London to Madrid services each week with long-haul aircraft and flat beds in business class. This is because it needs the cargo capacity offered by the bigger aircraft. Finnair does the same between London and Helsinki.

How cheap are Iberia redemptions to the US East Coast?

Iberia has its own reward pricing chart with its own peak and off-peak dates (click to enlarge).

This pricing applies even when you book Iberia redemptions via ba.com.

Iberia redemption chart

and

Iberia redemption Avios chart

Compared to British Airways pricing (based on the pricing before Reward Flight Saver was introduced), there are substantial differences in the 3,000 to 4,000 mile zone which covers the US East Coast.

Iberia, as you can see above, charges 68,000 Avios off-peak and 100,000 Avios peak for a return Business Class flight to New York.

Before Reward Flight Saver came in, British Airways charged 100,000 Avios off-peak and 120,000 Avios peak for a return Club World flight to New York. This has now increased to 160,000 and 180,000 Avios, albeit with far lower taxes – and the old pricing is still available if you want it.

You need to factor in the cost and time of getting to Madrid, although if you live outside London it is not massively more complex than changing planes at Heathrow.

Travelling to the US West Coast?  This isn’t as straightforward.  London to San Francisco is a Zone 6 flight, for example, whilst Madrid to San Francisco is Zone 7 as it is a longer trip.  You need to do the maths and also compare the taxes.

Of course, Iberia also has plenty of destinations that you can’t reach with British Airways, such as Bogota which Rhys visited on his review flight.

Planning an Avios trip to New York? Save a fortune with Iberia

Show me some actual numbers ….

Here’s a screenshot from ba.com showing Madrid to New York in Business Class:

The cost, on off-peak dates, is 68,000 Avios plus £215.

If I was using a British Airways American Express 2-4-1 companion voucher, the average cost per person would be 34,000 Avios plus £215, return.

This is not necessarily easy, of course.

  • from the UK, you need to fly to Madrid. However, if you are not based in London you will be taking a connecting flight anyway and the saving probably justifies not flying direct from London.
  • the London to Madrid flight cannot be booked on the same itinerary as the Madrid to New York flight or you will be obliged to pay UK Air Passenger Duty at the long-haul rate.
  • since you will have separate tickets, Iberia is not obliged to look after you if you miss your long-haul flight – although if you fly Iberia from London, it is very unlikely they would abandon you if the delay was down to them

Conclusion

If your mind is pondering a short break in New York or elsewhere on the US East Coast, don’t forget the exceptional Avios value offered by Iberia.

The saving on taxes and charge is HUGE compared to 160,000 Avios + £350 on British Airways, or 95,000 Virgin Points + £996 on Virgin Atlantic.

In return for a detour via Madrid – which is not necessarily a hardship – you can save a substantial amount in both Avios and taxes and charges on your way to New York.


How to earn Avios from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (April 2025)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Avios points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses!

In February 2022, Barclaycard launched two exciting new Barclaycard Avios Mastercard cards with a bonus of up to 25,000 Avios. You can apply here.

You qualify for the bonus on these cards even if you have a British Airways American Express card:

Barclaycard Avios Plus card

Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard

Get 25,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £10,000 Read our full review

Barclaycard Avios card

Barclaycard Avios Mastercard

Get 5,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £20,000 Read our full review

There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

30,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

British Airways American Express

5,000 Avios for signing up and an Economy 2-4-1 voucher for spending £15,000 Read our full review

You can also get generous sign-up bonuses by applying for American Express cards which earn Membership Rewards points. These points convert at 1:1 into Avios.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 30,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

Run your own business?

We recommend Capital on Tap for limited companies. You earn 1 Avios per £1 which is impressive for a Visa card, and the standard card is FREE. Capital on Tap cards also have no FX fees.

Capital on Tap Visa

NO annual fee, NO FX fees and points worth 1 Avios per £1 Read our full review

Capital on Tap Pro Visa

10,500 points (=10,500 Avios) plus good benefits Read our full review

There is also a British Airways American Express card for small businesses:

British Airways American Express Accelerating Business

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

There are also generous bonuses on the two American Express Business cards, with the points converting at 1:1 into Avios. These cards are open to sole traders as well as limited companies.

American Express Business Platinum

50,000 points when you sign-up and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

American Express Business Gold

20,000 points sign-up bonus and FREE for a year Read our full review

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Avios. This includes both personal and small business cards.

Comments (112)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Gordon says:

    As Rhys did, I am following in his footsteps, I have booked IB with a 2-4-1 MAD-BOG, J, CS, for a 3 week tour of Colombia, Christmas and new year,.

    105,000 Avios and £495 total for me and OH, booked a positioning flight on IB, LHR-MAD £141 Rtn each, and hotel in MAD night before, still quids in.

    • Jake says:

      I just did exactly that – exact same plan and approach More than happy to give tips and ideas if you want. Amazing trip

      • Gordon says:

        Yes, looking forward to it! We are booking our hotels through Emyr, so there are Just a couple of things, how did you travel through the country, (we normally take internal flights) and can you recommend a good tour guide, if you used one.

        • Jake says:

          Incredible place – amazing trip. You will have a great time.

          We flew everywhere on Avianca / Lan. Very safe, easy and cheap. We also hired cars for shorter trips with the standard of driving pretty good (compared to what you might be expecting). I would highly recommend doing this if possible. We didn’t use a tour guide but having been we are glad we didn’t – really enjoyed the freedom and flexibility of doing it ourselves. Also the whole place is far more safe and developed than its reputation would lead you to believe. Have put my itinerary below. Feel free to email jakemcloughlin8[at]hotmail.com for more info

          1 Day o/n in Madrid not to miss the plane – v. stress free so worth it
          2 Days in 4Season Bogota – Bogota is okay but not the best (very standard 2nd world city). Good to adjust to time diff though so spend some time there
          2 Days in Guatape / Medellin (drove between the two) having flown to Medellin. Guatape is wonderful as is the Penol rock. Medellin worth a day. No hotels to call out that we stayed in

          2 days in Barichara – wonderful place & very safe. Great for out doors activities. Stayed in Casa Yahri. Flew to Bucaramanga to get there and drove to Barichara. The drive is incredible with amazing views – would recommend. The Casa Yahri is run by this company which is great which you could use as a tour guide ‘lite’ https://www.nahbu.com

          2 days in near Tayrona National Park – again very pretty and stayed in Playa Villa Tayrona (flew to Santa Marta). The national park is worth a walk with great beaches / jungle vibes. Drove from Santa Marta to the hotel

          2 days near Minca in the forest in an incredible hotel called Terramina (a real highlight with great hiking, waterfalls and coffee tours).

          3 days in Cartagena (flew from Santa Marta to Bogota to Cartagena) with 2 nights in the Sofitel Isla Baru. This was a great way to end the hotel in a lux western resort with carribean vibes (white sand, water sports etc)

          • Gordon says:

            @Jake – Thank you for the info, It is much appreciated, I’ll email you shortly.

    • Sonnyb says:

      I just booked LHR-MAD-BOG return via BA rewards flight with 110500 Avios + £459.59 , all flights are operated by Iberia and it is Business class as well. So next time, I should do MAD-BOG on it own to avoid the high APD and book London to MAD separately?

      • Jake says:

        Yes solely if you want to avoid cost however, given you will have two tickets and two booking references there is no obligation on the airline (Iberia) to accommodate you if your first flight is late and put you on the second (like there is if you have one ticket). Something to be careful of. Although as Rob mentions you are unlikely to be left completely high & dry.

        I personally take the view that if I am going to spend about £450, I would rather go a day early on a cheap flight, see Madrid and get a hotel for the night and then get a low tax business flight from Madrid (for £250). You can save a little bit money but even if you don’t, you get more ‘holiday’ for the same outgoings. Obvs if there is two of you+, you save money AND get more holiday

      • Rob says:

        Yea (if willing to accept the risks in doing that).

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Did that a few years back. Even snuck in a stadium tour on the lay over on the way back.

  • Alex G says:

    The downside of Iberia is you have to fly back from the East Coast on a red eye. I will happily pay more for a daytime flight and an extra night at an airport hotel. You get to enjoy the flight, get home at night tired and ready to collapse into your own bed, and the jet lag is much easier.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      Do an open jaw (or even separate tickets) and fly out on IB but back to LHR on the BA or AA day flights. There are BA day flights ex JFK, EWR and BOS an and AA ex JFK and ORD.

  • Cwyfan says:

    It would be really helpful if all future similar articles showed a comparison where a 241 ticket is used for a solo traveller as well, now that that has been made an option.

    • G says:

      Does that matter? You just half the avios amount when its being used 241?

    • James C says:

      It already does: ‘If I was using a British Airways American Express 2-4-1 companion voucher, the average cost per person would be 34,000 Avios plus £215, return.’ This is what you’d pay as a solo traveller, a couple would pay double.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      It doesn’t mention using a GUF voucher either!

      I’m not having a pop but recently there has been a spate of people asking for all sorts of extra Information in articles without recognising that it takes Rob and Rhys a long time to research and write them already and they can’t cover every scanario.

      • Gordon says:

        3 articles a day is a lot of work, well done Rob and the team, I’d hate to see the hfp articles reduce in quality for the sake of trying to please everyone, tbh I don’t visit the forums, but I’ve heard that there is a lot of info on them to satisfy the majority of queries readers will have.

        • Rob says:

          We never use GUFs and neither do 99% of our readership. In fact it will be less than that, since 1% of our monthly unique users is still more than the number of GGL members.

          • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

            I have GUFs and am a mere Gold!

            But I was using it as an example of why you and Rhys can’t include every combination of vouchers and whatnots.

          • Christoph says:

            My I ask why you’re not using them? GGL myself, residing in Europe, and for me, they are very worthwhile and to 99% will not leave them unused?

          • Rob says:

            Because we never pay for flights 🙂

        • David says:

          I think Rob should contact each member of hfp and include examples for each one of them. It’s the least biased way. Surely?!

  • James C says:

    I’ve considered this before but I’m awash with Barclays vouchers and travelling solo LHR-JFK is only 85k Avios plus £350 so keep concluding the saving via MAD is not worth the hassle or hotel and positioning costs. Versus the 160k headline rate though it’s a real bargain

  • Christian F says:

    Did the BOG to MAD on Iberia Business last week using a BA two for one voucher. Word of caution! Leave plenty of time for the connecting long haul flight of you dint fancy a stressful trip, 4 to 5 hours. Due to the recent storms in the UK, the separate flight booking from LHR to MAD was delayed and since we had to pick luggage in MAD (the staff at Heathrow refused to check the luggage through to BOG) this meant we almost missed our long haul to BOG in MAD. We were running through Madrid airport like maniacs to try and make the flight after we pleaded for them to check out the luggage in.

    • Gordon says:

      This is why I am travelling the day before with an airport overnight stay in Madrid, I’ve heard a few stories like yours and do not fancy a missed flight. Fortune may favour the brave, but it’s not worth the chance to me. Plus I can spend time in the lounge on the day of the flight.

      • Bagoly says:

        I do overnight too on outbound.
        Especially as Madrid is a lovely city, where it is much easier to find wonderful food than Amsterdam or Dublin. It’s nearly always warmer too!
        Inbound I can face higher risk of a failed connection – it’s only a short-haul to replace.

        • Gordon says:

          Exactly that On the return, we have done the same for the same reason.

    • Mark says:

      You can, of course, book from the UK via Madrid with Iberia and pay the APD. If you do the connecting flights in business class as well you’re probably looking at around 100K Avios plus just over £400 off peak, so less of a saving but still a saving without being responsible for the connection.

      Coming back you can include the leg back to the UK without incurring UK APD.

      • Mark says:

        To clarify those numbers are for JFK, but the principle applies to other destinations as well.

        When we went to the US with Iberia a few years ago we opted to stay the night in the Air Rooms at Madrid airport and take the APD saving, but you have that choice. Coming back we booked a through connection to LHR.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      “the staff at Heathrow refused to check the luggage through to BOG”

      It’s been IB/BA/AA policy since 2016 not to through check bags on separate bookings even if the bookings are with the same airline.

  • Paul says:

    I imagine that the cheap Iberia option is now on life support following this article. IAG May we’ll move now to close off the loop hole

    • Gordon says:

      It’s different taxes and surcharges you can pay if flying from a different country as oppose to rip off UK! I would not call it a loophole. I’m sure the IAG group knew this when they allowed 2-4-1 vouchers to be used on IB.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      IAG isn’t the behemoth controller you think it is.

      All of the subsidiary businesses have a huge amount of control over their day to day activities including pricing and service offerings.

      IAG operates on a more strategic level such as buying planes and other corporate services.

      And in the scheme of things the people who will using their 2-4-1s for routings like this one are miniscule. Plus they will most likely fly to MAD on other IB and BA flights so they gain by that as well.

    • Rob says:

      It’s been there for over a decade.

  • The Original Nick. says:

    I’ve been using IB for years now to get to HAV, SFO, JFK , UIO and SJO this December. Madrid is a fantastic city to explore! There’s nothing wrong with there Business class product as long as you take the seats closer to the windows. The lounge at T4S is great with nice showers after a red eye. There’s also plenty of flights everyday to connect from MAD to LHR (Good for me but not for everyone) there’s not much hanging around. Unless you want to spend a night in Madrid on return.

    • Mikeact says:

      We too, have been doing this years…always get the first MAD out of LHR, for same day connection, just in case. Or with my top tier KLM, a short hop over to AMS or CDG for the same reasons. A doddle with never a problem.

  • aseftel says:

    Is there an easy way to find redemptions on the IB LHR-MAD widebody flights? Or do you just need to check through availability day by day?

    • The Original Nick. says:

      I wouldn’t bother wasting your Avios as the flights can be cheap enough as long as you book in advance. Do you subscribe to Expertflyer? If so, check to see if the cheapest tickets are still avaliable. And if you have status with OW, just book economy and you’ll get access to the premium economy exit row seats as long as the flight is operating it.

    • Gordon says:

      I found my LHR-MAD return on IB cheaper for a cash booking! So I would check first. In fact they were cheaper than Ryanair from STN and sleazy jet from LGW. Plus you earn avios into the bargain!

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      Use google flights and filter for IB only and then click on each flight in turn. One you’ve identified the appropriate flight times it makes doing the avios search much easier as you know which flights are scheduled for the A330/A350

    • e14 says:

      They usually are the 8 and 4 pm departures from Madrid in the summer so the 11 am and 7 pm from Heathrow

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